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Saturday, March 13, 2010

SERYKH TREATED WORSE THAN GOUZENKO

Gouzenko was pursued by enemy agents. Top people in Canada did not want to listen to him.

On 7 March 2010, Sergey Serykh (aka Sergeui Kriajev), his wife Tatiana and stepson Stepan were found dead at the foot of a Glasgow tower block.

Sergey Serykh and his family lived in Toronto and ran a herbal medicine business.

Stepdaughter Karina, now aged 34, returned to Moscow.

When Sergey came to Britain he lived first in London.

He sought help from Brent North Member of Parliament Barry Gardiner.

According to Gardiner, 'He used to say he was being hounded and he would present photographs of vans, which he had taken from the window of his flat.

'He said the people inside were using psychotronic radiation (a form of mind-control) against him.

'He also claimed to have received letters filled with anthrax, but when I had them screened on a machine at the House of Commons they contained nothing.'

Sergey moved to Glasgow.

According to the Daily Mail, which seems to be trying to discredit Sergey, a Glasgow heroin dealer alleges that stepson Stepan called at his door the evening before he died, 'begging for a fix for his father'.

According to Bain, Serykh had no outward appearances of mental illness.

"Tall and distinguished, with a slight grey tint to his hair, Mr. Serykh was well-dressed and articulate.

"He spoke perfect English and did not seem emotional or depressed.

"His stepson was with him when they visited the MP's office, and reiterated his father's belief that they could not return to Canada."

Canadian prime minister, Mackenzie King. Allegedly, "King was afraid that Gouzenko would reveal that the governing elite in the West was infested with Soviet agents like himself and Lester Pearson." (savethemales.ca - Lester Pearson, Tool)

In 1945, Igor Gouzenko defected from the Russian KGB, walked into an Ottawa newsroom and announced that he had details of Soviet spy rings operating in Canada and in the UK.

Norman Robertson, Undersecretary for External Affairs, informed King that a "terrible thing" had happened.

Gouzenko, they told him, had documents unmasking Soviet spies on Canadian soil.

Robertson told King that Gouzenko was threatening suicide.

King insisted that his government would not help Gouzenko, even if Gouzenko was going to be grabbed by the Russians.

Robertson ignored King's wishes and authorized granting asylum to Gouzenko and his family, on the basis that their lives were in danger.

In 1945, the Russians were allies of the Zionists.

According to Wikipedia, "Stalin adopted a pro-Zionist foreign policy", apparently believing that the Zionists would be socialist and would speed the decline of British influence in the Middle East.[2] Arms from Czechoslovakia, part of the Soviet bloc, were crucial to Israel in the 1948 Arab-Israeli War. (Cached )

Gouzenko's case was passed on to MI6's Kim Philby who was secretly on the side of Russia and Israel.

Russia and Israel came to share intelligence.

Philby suggested Gouzenko should be interviewed by Roger Hollis of MI5, who was allegedly a Soviet agent.